Searching for Tidal Orbital Decay in Hot Jupiters
Efrain Alvarado III, Kate B. Bostow, Kishore C. Patra, Cooper H., Jacobus, Raphael A. Baer-Way, Connor F. Jennings, Neil R. Pichay, Asia A., deGraw, Edgar P. Vidal, Vidhi Chander, Ivan A. Altunin, Victoria M. Brendel,, Kingsley E. Ehrich, James D. Sunseri, Michael B. May

TL;DR
This study investigates tidal orbital decay in hot Jupiters through transit observations, confirming decay only in WASP-12 b and setting constraints on other systems, highlighting the challenges of detection with current methods.
Contribution
The paper provides new transit timing measurements for several hot Jupiters, establishes lower limits on their tidal quality factors, and assesses the feasibility of detecting orbital decay with current and future radial velocity precision.
Findings
WASP-12 b shows confirmed orbital decay.
No decay detected in other systems within observational limits.
Future RV measurements require ~1 m/s precision for detection.
Abstract
We study transits of several ``hot Jupiter'' systems - including WASP-12 b, WASP-43 b, WASP-103 b, HAT-P-23 b, KELT-16 b, WD 1856+534 b, and WTS-2 b - with the goal of detecting tidal orbital decay and extending the baselines of transit times. We find no evidence of orbital decay in any of the observed systems except for that of the extensively studied WASP-12 b. Although the orbit of WASP-12 b is unequivocally decaying, we find no evidence for acceleration of said orbital decay, with measured , against the expected acceleration decay of . In the case of WD 1856+534 b, there is a tentative detection of orbital growth with . While statistically significant, we err on the side of caution and wait for longer follow-up observations to consider the measured…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Space Exploration and Technology
